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April 2026·6 min read

The Best Period Tracker That Doesn't Sell Your Data (2026)

Your cycle data is among the most sensitive information you generate. Yet millions of women hand it over to apps that treat it as a commodity. Here's what's really happening — and how to stop it.

Why period app data privacy matters

In 2021, the Norwegian Consumer Council found that Flo Health was sharing intimate user data — including period dates, pregnancy intentions, and mood logs — with Facebook, AppsFlyer, and Fabric. In 2023, Flo settled with the FTC over allegations of sharing that data without meaningful consent.

Period tracking data is uniquely sensitive because it can reveal pregnancy status, sexual activity, reproductive health decisions, and — in a post-Roe landscape — whether someone has missed a period around the time of an unwanted pregnancy. In several US states this data could theoretically be subpoenaed.

What gets collected by most mainstream period apps:

  • Period start and end dates
  • Flow intensity and spotting notes
  • Mood and energy logs
  • Sexual activity and birth control use
  • Pregnancy tests and fertility attempts
  • Location data (often via third-party SDKs)
  • Device identifiers linked to ad networks

What apps actually do with your data

Most period apps operate on a freemium model: the core tracking is free, but the real product is you. Your anonymised (and sometimes not-so-anonymised) health data is sold to data brokers, insurance companies, pharmaceutical advertisers, and fertility clinics.

Even apps that claim to “anonymise” data have been shown to de-anonymise it. Researchers at Berkeley demonstrated in 2019 that combining cycle length, age, and location narrows identification to a handful of individuals in most datasets.

Subscription apps are not automatically safer. Paying for an app does not prevent the company from monetising your data — it just means they're double-dipping. Read the privacy policy, not the marketing copy.

What to look for in a private period tracker

When evaluating a period tracker for privacy, look for these specifics:

  • No third-party analytics or advertising SDKs — Google Analytics, Facebook Pixel, and AppsFlyer inside a period app are red flags.
  • A clear, plain-English privacy policy — “We never sell your data” should be a named commitment, not buried in legalese.
  • Data export — you should be able to download everything you've logged in a portable format like CSV.
  • Account deletion — deleting your account should actually delete your data, not just deactivate it.
  • No advertising model — if the app is free and shows ads, your data is the product.
  • Transparent infrastructure — knowing where data is stored and who has access matters.

Dawn Phase: built privacy-first from day one

Dawn Phase was built with a single founding principle: your body data is yours. That means:

  • No third-party analytics. No advertising SDKs. No data brokers.
  • Data stored in Cloudflare D1 — encrypted at rest, never shared.
  • Export your data as CSV at any time from Settings.
  • Delete your account — and all your data — instantly from Settings.
  • The business model is simple: you pay a subscription. That's it.

We don't use your cycle data to train AI models, sell to insurers, or target you with fertility ads. We just use it to show you your own patterns.

FAQ: period app privacy

Can period tracking apps be subpoenaed?

Yes. In the US, if a company holds your data, law enforcement can subpoena it. The safest protection is choosing an app that stores minimal data and offers end-to-end encryption or on-device storage.

Is Flo period tracker safe to use?

Flo settled with the FTC in 2023 over sharing data with third parties. They have since introduced “Anonymous Mode” — but this requires manually opting in and still stores data on their servers.

What is the most private period tracker?

Apps built without an advertising model and with explicit no-sell commitments in their privacy policy are safest. Dawn Phase, Drip (on-device), and Euki are frequently cited by privacy advocates.

Free, private cycle tracking

No ads, no subscription, and we never sell your data — just your cycle, tracked privately.

Start tracking free →